4.8 Article

Synthetic group A streptogramin antibiotics that overcome Vat resistance

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NATURE
卷 586, 期 7827, 页码 145-+

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NATURE PORTFOLIO
DOI: 10.1038/s41586-020-2761-3

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资金

  1. UCSF-UCB Sackler Sabbatical Exchange Fellowship
  2. National Science Foundation Graduate Research Fellowship Program [1650113]
  3. Postdoctoral Individual National Research Award NIH [AI148120]
  4. National Institute on Minority Health and Health Disparities (NIMHD) research diversity supplement under NIH [GM123159]
  5. UCSF Program for Breakthrough Biomedical Research - Sandler Foundation
  6. Sangvhi-Agarwal Innovation Award
  7. Packard Fellowships from the David and Lucile Packard Foundation
  8. NIH [GM123159, GM128656, S10OD020054, S10OD021741]
  9. University of California Office of the President, Multicampus Research Programs and Initiatives grant [MR-15-328599]
  10. US Department of Energy under Office of Basic Energy Sciences [DE-AC02-05CH11231]
  11. Howard Hughes Medical Institute (HHMI)
  12. NIH Common Fund Transformative High Resolution Cryo-Electron Microscopy program [U24 GM129539]
  13. Simons Foundation [SF349247]
  14. NY State

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Modular synthesis and structural biology are used to design and characterize group A streptogramin antibiotics, one of which has activity against streptogramin-resistant strains and demonstrates efficacy in a mouse model of bacterial infection. Natural products serve as chemical blueprints for most antibiotics in clinical use. The evolutionary process by which these molecules arise is inherently accompanied by the co-evolution of resistance mechanisms that shorten the clinical lifetime of any given class of antibiotics(1). Virginiamycin acetyltransferase (Vat) enzymes are resistance proteins that provide protection against streptogramins(2), potent antibiotics against Gram-positive bacteria that inhibit the bacterial ribosome(3). Owing to the challenge of selectively modifying the chemically complex, 23-membered macrocyclic scaffold of group A streptogramins, analogues that overcome the resistance conferred by Vat enzymes have not been previously developed(2). Here we report the design, synthesis, and antibacterial evaluation of group A streptogramin antibiotics with extensive structural variability. Using cryo-electron microscopy and forcefield-based refinement, we characterize the binding of eight analogues to the bacterial ribosome at high resolution, revealing binding interactions that extend into the peptidyl tRNA-binding site and towards synergistic binders that occupy the nascent peptide exit tunnel. One of these analogues has excellent activity against several streptogramin-resistant strains ofStaphylococcus aureus, exhibits decreased rates of acetylation in vitro, and is effective at lowering bacterial load in a mouse model of infection. Our results demonstrate that the combination of rational design and modular chemical synthesis can revitalize classes of antibiotics that are limited by naturally arising resistance mechanisms.

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